A Sportsman's Sketches, by Ivan Turgenev

III Raspberry Spring

At the beginning of August the heat often becomes insupportable. At that season, from twelve to
three o’clock, the most determined and ardent sportsman is not able to hunt, and the most devoted dog begins to ‘clean
his master’s spurs,’ that is, to follow at his heels, his eyes painfully blinking, and his tongue hanging out to an
exaggerated length; and in response to his master’s reproaches he humbly wags his tail and shows his confusion in his
face; but he does not run forward. I happened to be out hunting on exactly such a day. I had long been fighting against
the temptation to lie down somewhere in the shade, at least for a moment; for a long time my indefatigable dog went on
running about in the bushes, though he clearly did not himself expect much good from his feverish activity. The
stifling heat compelled me at last to begin to think of husbanding our energies and strength. I managed to reach the
little river Ista, which is already known to my indulgent readers, descended the steep bank, and walked along the damp,
yellow sand in the direction of the spring, known to the whole neighbourhood as Raspberry Spring. This spring gushes
out of a cleft in the bank, which widens out by degrees into a small but deep creek, and, twenty paces beyond it, falls
with a merry babbling sound into the river; the short velvety grass is green about the source: the sun’s rays scarcely
ever reach its cold, silvery water. I came as far as the spring; a cup of birch-wood lay on the grass, left by a
passing peasant for the public benefit. I quenched my thirst, lay down in the shade, and looked round. In the cave,
which had been formed by the flowing of the stream into the river, and hence marked for ever with the trace of ripples,
two old men were sitting with their backs to me. One, a rather stout and tall man in a neat dark-green coat and lined
cap, was fishing; the other was thin and little; he wore a patched fustian coat and no cap; he held a little pot full
of worms on his knees, and sometimes lifted his hand up to his grizzled little head, as though he wanted to protect it
from the sun. I looked at him more attentively, and recognised in him Styopushka of Shumihino. I must ask the reader’s
leave to present this man to him.

A few miles from my place there is a large village called Shumihino, with a stone church, erected in the name of St.
Kosmo and St. Damian. Facing this church there had once stood a large and stately manor- house, surrounded by various
outhouses, offices, workshops, stables and coach-houses, baths and temporary kitchens, wings for visitors and for
bailiffs, conservatories, swings for the people, and other more or less useful edifices. A family of rich landowners
lived in this manor-house, and all went well with them, till suddenly one morning all this prosperity was burnt to
ashes. The owners removed to another home; the place was deserted. The blackened site of the immense house was
transformed into a kitchen-garden, cumbered up in parts by piles of bricks, the remains of the old foundations. A
little hut had been hurriedly put together out of the beams that had escaped the fire; it was roofed with timber bought
ten years before for the construction of a pavilion in the Gothic style; and the gardener, Mitrofan, with his wife
Axinya and their seven children, was installed in it. Mitrofan received orders to send greens and garden-stuff for the
master’s table, a hundred and fifty miles away; Axinya was put in charge of a Tyrolese cow, which had been bought for a
high price in Moscow, but had not given a drop of milk since its acquisition; a crested smoke-coloured drake too had
been left in her hands, the solitary ‘seignorial’ bird; for the children, in consideration of their tender age, no
special duties had been provided, a fact, however, which had not hindered them from growing up utterly lazy. It
happened to me on two occasions to stay the night at this gardener’s, and when I passed by I used to get cucumbers from
him, which, for some unknown reason, were even in summer peculiar for their size, their poor, watery flavour, and their
thick yellow skin. It was there I first saw Styopushka. Except Mitrofan and his family, and the old deaf churchwarden
Gerasim, kept out of charity in a little room at the one-eyed soldier’s widow’s, not one man among the house-serfs had
remained at Shumihino; for Styopushka, whom I intend to introduce to the reader, could not be classified under the
special order of house-serfs, and hardly under the genus ‘man’ at all.

Every man has some kind of position in society, and at least some ties of some sort; every house-serf receives, if
not wages, at least some so-called ‘ration.’ Styopushka had absolutely no means of subsistence of any kind; had no
relationship to anyone; no one knew of his existence. This man had not even a past; there was no story told of him; he
had probably never been enrolled on a census-revision. There were vague rumours that he had once belonged to someone as
a valet; but who he was, where he came from, who was his father, and how he had come to be one of the Shumihino people;
in what way he had come by the fustian coat he had worn from immemorial times; where he lived and what he lived on — on
all these questions no one had the least idea; and, to tell the truth, no one took any interest in the subject.
Grandfather Trofimitch, who knew all the pedigrees of all the house-serfs in the direct line to the fourth generation,
had once indeed been known to say that he remembered that Styopushka was related to a Turkish woman whom the late
master, the brigadier Alexy Romanitch had been pleased to bring home from a campaign in the baggage waggon. Even on
holidays, days of general money-giving and of feasting on buckwheat dumplings and vodka, after the old Russian fashion
— even on such days Styopushka did not put in an appearance at the trestle-tables nor at the barrels; he did not make
his bow nor kiss the master’s hand, nor toss off to the master’s health and under the master’s eye a glass filled by
the fat hands of the bailiff. Some kind soul who passed by him might share an unfinished bit of dumpling with the poor
beggar, perhaps. At Easter they said ‘Christ is risen!’ to him; but he did not pull up his greasy sleeve, and bring out
of the depths of his pocket a coloured egg, to offer it, panting and blinking, to his young masters or to the mistress
herself. He lived in summer in a little shed behind the chicken-house, and in winter in the ante-room of the bathhouse;
in the bitter frosts he spent the night in the hayloft. The house-serfs had grown used to seeing him; sometimes they
gave him a kick, but no one ever addressed a remark to him; as for him, he seems never to have opened his lips from the
time of his birth. After the conflagration, this forsaken creature sought a refuge at the gardener Mitrofan’s. The
gardener left him alone; he did not say ‘Live with me,’ but he did not drive him away. And Styopushka did not live at
the gardener’s; his abode was the garden. He moved and walked about quite noiselessly; he sneezed and coughed behind
his hand, not without apprehension; he was for ever busy and going stealthily to and fro like an ant; and all to get
food — simply food to eat. And indeed, if he had not toiled from morning till night for his living, our poor friend
would certainly have died of hunger. It’s a sad lot not to know in the morning what you will find to eat before night!
Sometimes Styopushka sits under the hedge and gnaws a radish or sucks a carrot, or shreds up some dirty cabbage-stalks;
or he drags a bucket of water along, for some object or other, groaning as he goes; or he lights a fire under a small
pot, and throws in some little black scraps which he takes from out of the bosom of his coat; or he is hammering in his
little wooden den — driving in a nail, putting up a shelf for bread. And all this he does silently, as though on the
sly: before you can look round, he’s in hiding again. Sometimes he suddenly disappears for a couple of days; but of
course no one notices his absence. . . . Then, lo and behold! he is there again, somewhere under the hedge,
stealthily kindling a fire of sticks under a kettle. He had a small face, yellowish eyes, hair coming down to his
eyebrows, a sharp nose, large transparent ears, like a bat’s, and a beard that looked as if it were a fortnight’s
growth, and never grew more nor less. This, then, was Styopushka, whom I met on the bank of the Ista in company with
another old man.

I went up to him, wished him good-day, and sat down beside him. Styopushka’s companion too I recognised as an
acquaintance; he was a freed serf of Count Piotr Ilitch’s, one Mihal Savelitch, nicknamed Tuman (i.e. fog). He
lived with a consumptive Bolhovsky man, who kept an inn, where I had several times stayed. Young officials and other
persons of leisure travelling on the Orel highroad (merchants, buried in their striped rugs, have other things to do)
may still see at no great distance from the large village of Troitska, and almost on the highroad, an immense
two-storied wooden house, completely deserted, with its roof falling in and its windows closely stuffed up. At mid-day
in bright, sunny weather nothing can be imagined more melancholy than this ruin. Here there once lived Count Piotr
Ilitch, a rich grandee of the olden time, renowned for his hospitality. At one time the whole province used to meet at
his house, to dance and make merry to their heart’s content to the deafening sound of a home-trained orchestra, and the
popping of rockets and Roman candles; and doubtless more than one aged lady sighs as she drives by the deserted palace
of the boyar and recalls the old days and her vanished youth. The count long continued to give balls, and to walk about
with an affable smile among the crowd of fawning guests; but his property, unluckily, was not enough to last his whole
life. When he was entirely ruined, he set off to Petersburg to try for a post for himself, and died in a room at a
hotel, without having gained anything by his efforts. Tuman had been a steward of his, and had received his freedom
already in the count’s lifetime. He was a man of about seventy, with a regular and pleasant face. He was almost
continually smiling, as only men of the time of Catherine ever do smile — a smile at once stately and indulgent; in
speaking, he slowly opened and closed his lips, winked genially with his eyes, and spoke slightly through his nose. He
blew his nose and took snuff too in a leisurely fashion, as though he were doing something serious.

‘Well, Mihal Savelitch,’ I began, ‘have you caught any fish?’

‘Here, if you will deign to look in the basket: I have caught two perch and five roaches. . . . Show them,
Styopka.’

Styopushka stretched out the basket to me.

‘How are you, Styopka?’ I asked him.

‘Oh — oh — not — not — not so badly, your honour,’ answered Stepan, stammering as though he had a heavy weight on
his tongue.

‘And is Mitrofan well?’

‘Well — yes, yes — your honour.’

The poor fellow turned away.

‘But there are not many bites,’ remarked Tuman; ‘it’s so fearfully hot; the fish are all tired out under the bushes;
they’re asleep. Put on a worm, Styopka.’ (Styopushka took out a worm, laid it on his open hand, struck it two or three
times, put it on the hook, spat on it, and gave it to Tuman.) ‘Thanks, Styopka. . . . And you, your honour,’
he continued, turning to me, ‘are pleased to be out hunting?’

‘As you see.’

‘Ah — and is your dog there English or German?’

The old man liked to show off on occasion, as though he would say, ‘I, too, have lived in the world!’

‘I don’t know what breed it is, but it’s a good dog.’

‘Ah! and do you go out with the hounds too?’

‘Yes, I have two leashes of hounds.’

Tuman smiled and shook his head.

‘That’s just it; one man is devoted to dogs, and another doesn’t want them for anything. According to my simple
notions, I fancy dogs should be kept rather for appearance’ sake . . . and all should be in style too; horses
too should be in style, and huntsmen in style, as they ought to be, and all. The late count — God’s grace be with him!
— was never, I must own, much of a hunter; but he kept dogs, and twice a year he was pleased to go out with them. The
huntsmen assembled in the courtyard, in red caftans trimmed with galloon, and blew their horns; his excellency would be
pleased to come out, and his excellency’s horse would be led up; his excellency would mount, and the chief huntsman
puts his feet in the stirrups, takes his hat off, and puts the reins in his hat to offer them to his excellency. His
excellency is pleased to click his whip like this, and the huntsmen give a shout, and off they go out of the gate away.
A huntsman rides behind the count, and holds in a silken leash two of the master’s favourite dogs, and looks after them
well, you may fancy. . . . And he, too, this huntsman, sits up high, on a Cossack saddle: such a red-cheeked
fellow he was, and rolled his eyes like this. . . . And there were guests too, you may be sure, on such
occasions, and entertainment, and ceremonies observed. . . . Ah, he’s got away, the Asiatic!’ He interrupted
himself suddenly, drawing in his line.

‘They say the count used to live pretty freely in his day?’ I asked.

The old man spat on the worm and lowered the line in again.

‘He was a great gentleman, as is well-known. At times the persons of the first rank, one may say, at Petersburg,
used to visit him. With coloured ribbons on their breasts they used to sit down to table and eat. Well, he knew how to
entertain them. He called me sometimes. “Tuman,” says he, “I want by to-morrow some live sturgeon; see there are some,
do you hear?” “Yes, your excellency.” Embroidered coats, wigs, canes, perfumes, eau de Cologne of the best
sort, snuff-boxes, huge pictures: he would order them all from Paris itself! When he gave a banquet, God Almighty, Lord
of my being! there were fireworks, and carriages driving up! They even fired off the cannon. The orchestra alone
consisted of forty men. He kept a German as conductor of the band, but the German gave himself dreadful airs; he wanted
to eat at the same table as the masters; so his excellency gave orders to get rid of him! “My musicians,” says he, “can
do their work even without a conductor.” Of course he was master. Then they would fall to dancing, and dance till
morning, especially at the écossaise-matrador. . . . Ah — ah — there’s one caught!’ (The old man drew a small
perch out of the water.) ‘Here you are, Styopka! The master was all a master should be,’ continued the old man,
dropping his line in again, ‘and he had a kind heart too. He would give you a blow at times, and before you could look
round, he’d forgotten it already. There was only one thing: he kept mistresses. Ugh, those mistresses! God forgive
them! They were the ruin of him too; and yet, you know, he took them most generally from a low station. You would fancy
they would not want much? Not a bit — they must have everything of the most expensive in all Europe! One may say, “Why
shouldn’t he live as he likes; it’s the master’s business” . . . but there was no need to ruin himself. There
was one especially; Akulina was her name. She is dead now; God rest her soul! the daughter of the watchman at Sitoia;
and such a vixen! She would slap the count’s face sometimes. She simply bewitched him. My nephew she sent for a
soldier; he spilt some chocolate on a new dress of hers . . . and he wasn’t the only one she served so. Ah,
well, those were good times, though!’ added the old man with a deep sigh. His head drooped forward and he was
silent.

‘Your master, I see, was severe, then?’ I began after a brief silence.

‘That was the fashion then, your honour,’ he replied, shaking his head.

‘That sort of thing is not done now?’ I observed, not taking my eyes off him.

He gave me a look askance.

‘Now, surely it’s better,’ he muttered, and let out his line further.

We were sitting in the shade; but even in the shade it was stifling. The sultry atmosphere was faint and heavy; one
lifted one’s burning face uneasily, seeking a breath of wind; but there was no wind. The sun beat down from blue and
darkening skies; right opposite us, on the other bank, was a yellow field of oats, overgrown here and there with
wormwood; not one ear of the oats quivered. A little lower down a peasant’s horse stood in the river up to its knees,
and slowly shook its wet tail; from time to time, under an overhanging bush, a large fish shot up, bringing bubbles to
the surface, and gently sank down to the bottom, leaving a slight ripple behind it. The grasshoppers chirped in the
scorched grass; the quail’s cry sounded languid and reluctant; hawks sailed smoothly over the meadows, often resting in
the same spot, rapidly fluttering their wings and opening their tails into a fan. We sat motionless, overpowered with
the heat. Suddenly there was a sound behind us in the creek; someone came down to the spring. I looked round, and saw a
peasant of about fifty, covered with dust, in a smock, and wearing bast slippers; he carried a wickerwork pannier and a
cloak on his shoulders. He went down to the spring, drank thirstily, and got up.

‘Ah, Vlass!’ cried Tuman, staring at him; ‘good health to you, friend! Where has God sent you from?’

‘Good health to you, Mihal Savelitch!’ said the peasant, coming nearer to us; ‘from a long way off.’

‘Where have you been?’ Tuman asked him.

‘I have been to Moscow, to my master.’

‘What for?’

‘I went to ask him a favour.’

‘What about?’

‘Oh, to lessen my rent, or to let me work it out in labour, or to put me on another piece of land, or something.
. . . My son is dead — so I can’t manage it now alone.’

‘Your son is dead?’

‘He is dead. My son,’ added the peasant, after a pause, ‘lived in Moscow as a cabman; he paid, I must confess, rent
for me.’

‘Then are you now paying rent?’

‘Yes, we pay rent.’

‘What did your master say?’

‘What did the master say! He drove me away! Says he, “How dare you come straight to me; there is a bailiff for such
things. You ought first,” says he, “to apply to the bailiff . . . and where am I to put you on other land?
You first,” says he, “bring the debt you owe.” He was angry altogether.’

‘What then — did you come back?’

‘I came back. I wanted to find out if my son had not left any goods of his own, but I couldn’t get a straight
answer. I say to his employer, “I am Philip’s father”; and he says, “What do I know about that? And your son,” says he,
“left nothing; he was even in debt to me.” So I came away.’

The peasant related all this with a smile, as though he were speaking of someone else; but tears were starting into
his small, screwed-up eyes, and his lips were quivering.

‘Well, are you going home then now?’

‘Where can I go? Of course I’m going home. My wife, I suppose, is pretty well starved by now.’

‘You should — then,’ Styopushka said suddenly. He grew confused, was silent, and began to rummage in the
worm-pot.

‘And shall you go to the bailiff?’ continued Tuman, looking with some amazement at Styopka.

‘What should I go to him for? — I’m in arrears as it is. My son was ill for a year before his death; he could not
pay even his own rent. But it can’t hurt me; they can get nothing from me. . . . Yes, my friend, you can be
as cunning as you please — I’m cleaned out!’ (The peasant began to laugh.) ‘Kintlyan Semenitch’ll have to be clever if
—’